Chinese University Students and Their Experiences of Acculturation at an Ethnic Christian Church

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Chinese University Students and Their Experiences of Acculturation at an Ethnic Christian Church Journal of International Students ISSN: 2162-3104 Print/ ISSN: 2166-3750 Online Volume 8, Issue 1 (2018), pp. 131–150 © Journal of International Students http://jistudents.org/ doi: 10.5281/zenodo.1134269 Chinese University Students and Their Experiences of Acculturation at an Ethnic Christian Church Xiaoyang Sun Temple University, United States Robert A. Rhoads University of California Los Angeles, United States ABSTRACT This paper examines the experiences of Chinese international students from East Coast University (a pseudonym) in the United States through their participation in a Chinese ethnic-based Christian church (CCC). Employing ethnographic-based fieldwork, the study highlights how Chinese international students see their experiences in CCC as a source of acculturation to U.S. society. However, the students evidence little understanding of the reality that they are in fact being acculturated to a subculture within U.S. society that at times embraces values contradictory to those of progressive-oriented East Coast University. Keywords: acculturation, Chinese international students, diversity mission, ethnographic methods, subculture Globalization has produced interconnected economies and arguably transformed the world into a self-regulated global entity in which decisions by leading nations such as the United Kingdom and the United States have a powerful effect on other nations (Arrighi, 2010; Polanyi, 2001). As Wallerstein (2004) argued, the world has moved toward a single “world system” with countries categorized as core, semi-peripheral, and peripheral. Although much attention has been given to the economic and political implications of a world system, much less analysis has addressed the 131 Journal of International Students cultural facets of globalization, including the growing multicultural nature of major cities and regions in countries experiencing high levels of immigration both in terms of temporary and permanent residents (Luke & Luke, 2000; Sassen, 1991; Smith, 2006). One area where this is clearly having an impact is in higher education and the increasing mobility of students. Chinese students in particular have become a global force in terms of their level of mobility as international students seeking degrees beyond their homeland. And the United States, of course, has become the dominant player as a host country for Chinese international students. Recent years have witnessed a huge increase in the flow of international students to colleges and universities in the United States. For example, 2015 data from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security revealed that 1.13 million foreign students were studying in the United States; this represents an 85 percent increase from 2005 (Jordan, 2015). Asia is the leading region from which U.S. foreign students come (Ruiz, 2014), with China by far the largest sending nation, accounting for 29 percent (over 330,000 students) of the U.S. international student enrollment (Jordan, 2015). As Williams noted, international students “in pursuit of professional credentials, social capital, and cultural fluency…stimulated the U.S. economy to the tune of 22 billion dollars, making higher education one of the United States’ most important service sector exports” (2013, p. 256). With more and more international students from Asian countries such as China coming to the United States, and in light of dramatic cultural differences between East and West, the acculturation of these students should be of central concern to the colleges and universities hosting them. With the preceding points in mind, this paper explores the experiences of acculturation among Chinese international students at East Coast University (ECU), a pseudonym for a large university near the east coast of the United States. Furthermore, we examine the experiences of Chinese students through their engagement in a local church called Chinese Christian Church (CCC), also a pseudonym. The church is situated adjacent to the ECU campus and has extensive outreach services targeting the needs of Chinese international students. Given the growing numbers of Chinese internationals who come to the United States for academic study, it is important to better understand the nature of their experiences as they seek to adjust to their new environment and surroundings. As global forces continue to act on nations and individual social actors such as college students, more research needs to address this growing phenomenon. Further, research has demonstrated that many Chinese international students become engaged in Christian organizations, but little is known about how such experiences 132 Journal of International Students contribute to their acculturation to the multicultural nature of U.S. society. Thus, it is necessary to better understand how Chinese college students construct meaning relative to their involvement in campus-oriented Christian organizations such as CCC as part of their broader acculturation to the society. Accordingly, the following research questions guide our study: 1. What explanations do Chinese international students offer in terms of their decision to study abroad and how did they come to select the United States? 2. How do ECU students make sense of their involvement in a Chinese Christian church relative to their experiences in the United States and to what extent does it help with their adjustment to their new environment? We argue that Chinese international students at ECU get involved in CCC to access a variety of benefits, but that easing their adjustment or acculturation to U.S. society is a key one. In examining the experiences of Chinese international students at CCC, we make use of concepts and theories related to globalization, multiculturalism, and acculturation, while also relying heavily on the sociological school of thought known as symbolic interactionism (S.I.). Our objective is to better understand how Chinese students make sense of their involvement in CCC as a form of acculturation. Because of our focus on sense making, we argue that S.I. is a good methodology to use, given that it centers the lived experiences of social actors as they interact with and interpret their environments. We also use ethnographic methods as part of our research strategy, as this allows us to engage with Chinese undergraduates at CCC. Ethnography as a method offers sound field-based strategies for digging deeper into the meaning people give to their experiences. LITERATURE REVIEW We organize a discussion of the literature into two parts: (a) a discussion of previous research related to Chinese internationals and their involvement with Christianity, and (b) a discussion of the theoretical influences that we draw on to guide our analysis. Chinese Internationals and Christianity Many scholars in the field of sociology of religion have looked at the issue of religious conversion. What makes this body of literature of 133 Journal of International Students special importance for our research is that some of these studies examined the conversion to Christianity among Asian Americans, Chinese immigrants, and in some cases, among Chinese international students and scholars. Assimilation is a key sociological concept often used in examining religious conversion and when looking at motives for converting to Christianity among immigrants. Yang (1998) lays out three assimilation explanations for interpreting immigrant religious conversion. The first explanation Yang described is in terms of “Rice Christians,” which relates to the idea that many immigrants join a church in order to gain material help. The motive for getting material benefits from the church comes from their immigrant status, where as members of a new society they have little to no access to resources and key social institutions. The church thus fills the resource-gap void. This instrumental aspect of religious experience among Chinese international students in particular is evidenced in other studies where researchers found that ethnic-oriented evangelical churches tend to make the atmosphere of their churches as friendly and welcoming as possible. Examples of welcoming behaviors include providing dinner, offering airport pickup service, and inviting immigrants to Bible study groups where they might also improve their English. Some religious organizations even work as moral guards by discouraging immigrants from going astray through such habits as smoking, engaging in prostitution, or gambling (Kalir, 2009; Wang & Yang, 2006; Williams, 2013). Cadge and Ecklund (2007) also suggest that the material support is a key facet to the conversion of immigrants given that “religious organizations facilitate their adaptation in the United States” (p. 362). A second explanation offered by Yang (1998) is called “Assimilation to the Dominant Culture of the Host Society.” This explanation relates to the idea that new immigrants have the urgent desire to assimilate and Christianity is seen as a vehicle for that, because they tend to associate being Christian with being American. In describing how religious participation strengthens the civic life of immigrants, Cadge and Ecklund (2007) supported Yang’s argument, when they noted that, “High levels of cultural and religious assimilation were expected to foster large-scale inclusion into the networks and institutions of American civic life” (p. 366). The last assimilation explanation Yang (1998) lays out is called “Joining the Church to Meet Ethnic Needs,” where the social needs for ethnic fellowship and ethnic belonging
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